I'm sort of waiting for the more detailed parts of the report to come out before talking much about it, but I note a couple of things:
* Judith Curry's attitude is "They're not listening to me!
They've all gone mad! Mad I say!" And she's now recommending people
read David Rose on "the pause"! Her credibility was already shot. Now it's toast. Burnt toast. In fact, crumbs of black carbon which have to be sent off to forensics to see if it actually ever was bread.
*
Andrew Bolt, of course, recommends Curry (his current favourite of the bare handful of dissenting climate scientists out of the actual huge pool of scientists who work in the area.) Bolt also notes:
It now predicts as little as 0.3 degrees of warming or 4.8 at most.
Anything under 2 degrees would actually be good for us, meaning more
rain and better crops — not that the IPCC mentions reassuring news.
Of course, he couldn't care less about being accurate, but the .3 degree estimate is based on the smallest emissions scenario considered
(see page 25 of the report) - RCP 2.6 - which I am pretty sure would take a massive effort to achieve. And, as is common amongst the climate stupid: the ranges Bolt refers to end at 2100.
The world does not end then, but it appears to be something Bolt, and his small brained followers, appear unable to contemplate, even though he has kids of his own.
If Bolt wants to be honest on this topic, he might point out that the actual estimates he should rely on are those which are in accord with his idea that the world should burn as much carbon fuel as it likes - let's take scenario RCP 6, then.
It gives a range of likely increases (on top of what we already have) of 1.4 degrees to 3.1 by 2100.
Unless I am mistaken, even 1.4 degrees puts us over the (very arbitrary, and quite possibly still dangerous) 2 degree limit, given that we have already gone up about .8 degree.
So, the short message should be that Andrew Bolt thinks you should believe him, and a handful of ideologically motivated contrarian scientists, and burn away and take the risk that global temperatures will increase to 2 to 4 degrees higher by the end of the century, setting the world on a steady course of massive sea rises and massive climate change.
No thanks.